McDonald v. Askew

29 Cal. 200
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 Cal. 200 (McDonald v. Askew) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDonald v. Askew, 29 Cal. 200 (Cal. 1865).

Opinion

By the Court, Shafter, J.

This is an action to restrain the defendants from erecting a dam across Bear Elver, whereby, as the complaint alleges, the water of the river will be impeded in its usual current and flowed back upon the wheel of the plaintiffs’ flouring mill, thereby preventing the running of said mill, to the irreparable damage of the plaintiffs.

The defendants, by a supplemental answer, filed by leave of the Court, admitted that the plaintiffs at the commencement of the action, were the owners and entitled to the use of the water at their mill to the extent of one thousand inches and no more; but they averred that pending the action and on the 17th of December, 1862, the plaintiffs “ conveyed by deed to the Bear River and Auburn Water and Mining Company all the waters of Bear River to the capacity of the water ditches and works of the said company, to wit: the water ditch known as the Bear River and Auburn Water and Mining Company’s Ditch, and the water ditch known as the Gold Hill Ditch. That the capacity of the ditch first named, on the day the deed was executed, was more than two thousand inches, and the capacity of the Gold Hill Ditch one thousand inches. That both said ditches take the waters of the said river from the channel thereof at points more than ten miles above the plaintiffs’ said mill. That the plaintiffs claimed and owned the said one thousand inches by virtue of a location and appropriation in of about the year 1849 or 1850, and prior to the construction of the dam of the defendants and the location and appropriation of the waters of said river by them for mining purposes, which event took place in 1853.- That at all times since the said sale and conveyance of the waters of Bear River on the 17th of December, 1862, the Bear River and Auburn Water and Mining Company have taken out and diverted from the river, at the heads of their said ditches, and more than ten, miles above the plaintiffs’ said mill, all the waters of the river to the full capacity of the ditches, and at all times and seasons since the said date much more than one thousand inches, the [205]*205amount to which plaintiffs were entitled by virtue of their prior appropriation. That the Bear River and Auburn Water and Mining Company, by means of their said ditches, conduct the waters a long distance away from the river and so use and appropriate the same that no part thereof, or if any, very little, and less than one hundred inches of the same, is returned or comes back to the channel of said river at or above the mill of the plaintiffs or the dam of the defendants.”

The trial was by the Court, who found that the admitted prior right of the plaintiffs was limited to one thousand inches. That thereafter and prior to the commencement of the action, the defendants located a mining claim below the plaintiffs’ mill, and erected a dam across the river for the purpose of raising and running the water upon their mining ground. That pending the litigation, the plaintiffs conveyed to the Bear River and Auburn Water and Mining Company, all their right, title, and interest in and to the waters of Bear River, or sufficient thereof to fill the ditches of the company, and that the ditches are of greater capacity than the amount claimed by the plaintiffs. That during a large portion of the year the Bear River Company use almost the entire volume of the water of the river, but that below their dams and above the plaintiffs’ mill, there are some small tributaries coming to Bear River, sufficient to run the mill, even at the low stage of the water, a portion of the time. That at the lowest stage the water of the said tributaries and waste water from the said ditches amounts to seventy-five inches, and that the mill can run one stone upon seventy inches.

The Court considered that the plaintiffs, “by the sale of their water, and all of it, to the Bear River Company, had lost their prior right; and if they then laid a new claim to the use of the surplus water of Bear River, it being later in time, the claim must be subservient to the claim of defendants for their mining purposes; and their claim is to raise their dam to the height of five feet. This claim of defendants is prior in right to any new claim of water made by plaintiffs subsequent to the sale of their original right of use, and this claim [206]*206they are entitled to use in any legitimate manner, with all its incidents. It is true, even a legitimate and reasonable use by defendants of their^claim may work an injury to the plaintiffs; but whatever rights the plaintiffs .now have to the use of the water in the running of their mill must be subject to the now prior rights of defendants.” On these views judgment was entered for the defendants, dissolving the temporary injunction and dismissing the suit with costs.

It will be observed that the reasoning proceeds upon the assumption that the rights which the plaintiffs had acquired by reason of their location and appropriation in 1849-50, passed to the Auburn. Water and Mining Company by the deed of December 17th, 1862; and if such was the fact, the conclusion at which the Court arrived may, for the purposes of this bearing be taken as correct. But we do not consider that the subject matter of the conveyance was identical with the rights vested in the plaintiffs, and.for the protection of which this suit was instituted.

• In the first place, the interest of the plaintiffs in the waters of Bear River related to the point where their dam was built and where the mill stood ; while the interest conveyed related to a point where the then existing ditches of the grantees tapped the river ten miles above. That which the plaintiffs parted with is not identical, then, with that which they had, in the matter of location or position.

Interest acquired in water by appropriation, or purchase and sale of the same.

But, further, the interest vested in the plaintiffs, and the interest conveyed by them, differ in essential nature. The interest acquired by the plaintiffs through their prior location was not a property in the water as such. (Eddy v. Simpson, 3 Cal. 251; Kidd v. Laird, 15 Cal. 179,) but a right to the momentum of its fall at the point where the stream was crossed by the dam, and to the flow; of the water in its natural course above as subservient to that end. (Kelly v. Natoma Water Company, 6 Cal. 108 ; Ang. W. C. 91, 96.) The sub[207]*207ject matter of the conveyance made by the plaintiffs was not water power, but water as such; or the right to divert water up to the capacity of certain existing ditches to receive it. If the proper data were given, the amount of water which the grantees thus acquired the right to divert might be stated in cubic feet or in gallons. A grant may be of a certain quantity of water; for instance, for as much as would pass through a pipe or floodgate, or a sluiceway of certain dimensions; or it may be of a certain extent of water power, as much and no more, as is required to operate certain machinery. This distinction is as obvious as it is important. (Miller ex parte, 3 Hill, 418 ; Bardwell v. Ames, 22 Pick. 333 ; Kennedy v. Scovil, 12 Conn. 317.) In Mayor, etc. v. Commissioners of Spring Garden,

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Bluebook (online)
29 Cal. 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-askew-cal-1865.